 |
This
young oak seedling will grow in time to be part of a deciduous
oak woodland
|
|
 |
The
Oak tree grows tall and broad, under which many plants and animals thrive. |
|
 |
Oak
Woods, New Forest, Hampshire |
|
 |
A
view of the (largely) coniferous Kielder Forest in Northumberland, looking
over Kielder Water |
|
 |
View
of a pine in the Caledonian Pine Forest of Scotland. Some trees live
in excess of 450 years old. |
|
| |
|
|
 |
View
of Kielder Forest in Northumberland. This is largely a working coniferous
forest, grown and managed by a government agency called Forest Enterprise. |
|
| Forest
Wildlife |
There
is a large variety of wildlife living in our forests and woodlands.
These are examples of some of the plants and animals: |
|
 |
Red
Fox |
 |
Common
Long Eared Bat |
 |
Hedgehog |
 |
Fly
Agaric |
 |
Foxglove |
| |
|
 |
Red
Squirrel |
 |
Curlew |
| Forest
Management |
|
 |
Conifers
(Douglas Fir) are being grown in tree nurseries and will soon be ready
to plant out in the Forest |
|
 |
Planting
conifers (Sitka Spruce) on a site which was felled a few years before |
|
 |
Some
areas of forest naturally regenerate again after being felled. This
young Sitka Spruce will soon be the size of those brought in from the
nursery to plant out |
|
 |
In
large commercial forests such as Kielder and Hamsterley, tree are felled
by large computer controlled machines called Harvesters The Harvester
takes hold of large conifers, strips all the side branches, fells it,
then cuts it into the right size of logs for the customer |
|
 |
In
smaller woodlands felling is carried out manually using a chainsaw.
It would be neither financially viable nor environmentally sustainable
to fell with a large Harvester. |
|
| |
|
|
 |
A
machine called a Forwarder collects the logs, and takes them to roadside,
where they are stacked ready for loading onto lorries
|
|
| Timber
lorries loading logs at roadside and transported out of the forest to
sawmills and woodchip plants such as Egger at Hexham in Northumberland |
 
|
|
| In
some places, such as in areas of Scotland, logs are transported by boat
to the sawmill |
  |
|
Other
aspects of woodland and forest management |
 |
There
are many jobs within forestry and woodland management. These students
are being trained in chainsaw use |
|
| There are many forms of human impact
on forests and woodlands, e.g. they are used for recreation in the form
of walking, horse riding, cycling and motor sport. Unfortunately some
aspects of human impact such as fly tipping have a negative effect |
  

|
|
| |
|
|
 |
Some deciduous
woodlands are managed to make products such as charcoal
and hurdles (traditional fences made of hazel)
|
|